"You have made ten and a half knots an hour, Mr. Engineer," replied Scott.
"Diez y medio nudos la hora," added Louis, saying the same thing in Spanish.
"Very good! I do more than that now," replied Felipe, delighted with the result.
"The eastern point of Tangier Bay is Point Malabata. Our course will take the steamer close to it, allowing a little for the current; and when it bears east half a mile distant, that will give us ten knots," said Captain Scott, looking at the chart all the time.
It was very evident to all on deck that the engineer was driving the engine to its utmost, and Louis thought it best to make a call upon him and caution him not to overdo the matter. Felipe pointed to the gage, and assured him that he was on the safe side, and that the boiler was very strong, for the Pacha had told him that he had required it to be built of double the ordinary strength. The steam-gage certainly indicated no danger; and, as Felipe would be the first one to be sent up into the air in case of an explosion, Louis concluded that he would not be willing to sacrifice himself as the first victim.
"What time is it now, Louis?" demanded the captain, when the steamer was off Point Malabata and half a mile beyond it.
"Three: thirty-five," replied Louis, who had drawn his watch before.
Scott began to figure again, repeating aloud his calculation as he proceeded.
"We have been through different currents since we began the last run," said he, with the plan in his hand. "Half the way we ran against the middle current, and the last half with the ebb-tide."
"How fast does the middle current run?" asked Louis.